L’Encyclopédie de l’histoire du Québec / The Quebec History Encyclopedia

Harpoons
of the Canadian Indian

[This
text was originally published in 1907 by the Bureau of American Ethnology
as part of its Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico.
It was later reproduced, in 1913, by the Geographic Board of Canada.
The work done by the American Bureau was monumental, well informed and
incorporated the most advanced scholarship available at the time. In
many respects, the information is still useful today, although prudence
should be exercised and the reader should consult some of the contemporary
texts on the history and the anthropology of the North-West Indians
suggested in the bibliographic introduction to this section. The articles
were not completely devoid of the paternalism and the prejudices prevalent
at the time. While some of the terminology used would not pass the test
of our "politically correct" era, most terms have been left unchanged
by the editor. If a change in the original text has been effected it
will be found between brackets [.] The original work contained long
bibliographies that have not been reproduced for this web edition. For
the full citation, see the end of the text.]

Harpoons.
Piercing and retrieving weapons with a moveable head-probably the most
ingenious and complicated device invented by the North American aborigines.
Before the natives came into contact with the whites, they made harpoons
of wood, bone, walrus ivory, shell, stone, sinew, and hide. The several
structural parts consisted of the shaft, foreshaft, loose shaft, ice
pick, head, hinge, connecting line, assembling line, main line, hand
rest, eyelet, float, and detachers. Besides these there were a multitude
of accessories, such as stools, decoys, ice scoops, and canoes. The
technic of every part represented the Indian's best skill in a number
of handicrafts wood working, bone and ivory carving, chipping and grinding
stone; shredding, twisting, and braiding sinew; and dressing hides or
floats, canoes, and the toughest possible thongs or lines, and other
parts.

There
are two quite different varieties of harpoons, based on the shape of
the head - the barbed harpoon and the toggle harpoon. The head of the
barbed harpoon is attached to the shaft by means of a connecting line
tied to the butt or tang of the head. The toggle head is attached to
the line or sling by means of a hole bored through the body; the head
is driven entirely into the animal, and, toggling under the skin, gives
firm hold. These two types merge into each other, and some harpoons
possess the characteristics of both.

The
parts of a barbed harpoon are:

Head.
- Of various materials,
the specific characters being the same as those of barbed arrows; they
differ in that the tang fits loosely into a socket and is roughened,
notched, or pierced for the hingeing or connecting line.

Foreshaft.
- That of the harpoon, as compared with the arrow, is heavier, and has
a socket in front for the wedge-shaped, conical, or spindle-shaped tang
of the head.

Shaft.
- Length, from a few inches to many feet; thickness, from one-fourth
of an inch to an inch or more; outer end spliced or socketed to the
foreshaft; center of gravity furnished with hand rest; inner end pointed,
pitted for hook of throwing stick, notched for a bowstring, with or
without feathers, or furnished with ice pick.

Connecting
line. - Of string or thong rudely tied
to head and shaft or, in the finest specimens, attached at one end through
a hole in the tang, the other end being bifurcated and fastened like
a martingale to the ends of the shaft. When the animal is struck by
the hurled harpoon the head is withdrawn, the foreshaft sinks by its
gravity, and the shaft acts as a drag to impede the progress of the
game (see Nat. Mus. Rep . 1900, pl. 11).

The
parts of a toggle harpoon are:

Toggle
head. - Consisting of body; blade of
slate, chipped stone, ivory, or metal, usually fitted into a slit in
front; line hole or opening through the body for the sling or leader
of hide on which the toggle head hinges; line grooves channeled backward
from the line hole to protect the leader; barbs projecting backward
at the butt of the toggle head to catch into the flesh and make the
head revolve 90 degrees, forming a T with the line; shaft socket, a
conoid pit in the butt of the toggle head to receive front end of loose
shaft; and leader or sling, not always separate, but when so, either
spliced to the main line or joined by an ingenious detacher, which is
sometimes prettily carved.

Loose
shaft. - A
spindle-shaped piece of ivory socketed to toggle head and foreshaft
and attached as a hinge to the leader or the foreshaft. Its object is
to catch the strain caused by convulsive movements in the game and to
render certain the speedy detachment of the toggle head.

One
of the most interesting studies in connection with harpoons is environment
in relation to culture - the play between the needy and ingenious man
and the resources of game, materials, and tools. In E. Greenland is
found the hinged toggle by the side of old forms; in W. Greenland a
great variety of types from the very primitive and coarse to those having
feathers of ivory and the hooks on the shaft. In the latter area are
also throwing sticks of two kinds. On the W. side of Davis
strait harpoons are heavy and coarse, showing
contact of the natives with whalers, especially the Ungava [Inuit] examples.
There also are flat types suggestive of N.
Asia .
From the Mackenzie River
country the harpoons are small and under the influence of the white
trader. The h arpoons of the Pt. Barrow [Inuit] are exhaustively discussed
by Murdoch and those from point Barrow southward by Nelson.

From
mount St. Elias southward, within the timber belt where wood is easily
obtainable, harpoon shafts are longer, but all the parts are educed
to their simplest form. For example, the Ntlakyapamuk of British Columbia
make the toggle heads of their two-pronged harpoons by neatly lashing
the parts together and to the sennit leaders. The Makah of Washington
formerly made the blade of the head from shell, but now use metal; the
leader is tied to a large, painted float of sealskin, the shaft being
free. The Quinaielt of Washington have the bifurcated shaft, but no
float, The Naltunne of Oregon have a barbed harpoon, with prongs on
the blade as well as on the shank, while their cousins, the Hupa of
N. California make the toggle, as do the Vancouver tribes,
by attaching the parts of the head to a strip of rawhide.

Source:
James WHITE, ed., Handbook of Indians of Canada,
Published as an Appendix to the Tenth Report of the Geographic Board
of Canada,
Ottawa,
1913, 632p., pp. 193-194.